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    Restaurant in Amsterdam, Netherlands

    RIJKS®

    1,025Pearl Points

    Michelin-starred Dutch cuisine. Book early.

    RIJKS®, Restaurant in Amsterdam

    About RIJKS®

    RIJKS® holds a Michelin star and ranks among Europe's top casual fine dining addresses, with chef Joris Bijdendijk building a precise, vegetable-forward menu around Dutch ingredients and colonial trade-route influences. Inside the Rijksmuseum, it is Amsterdam's most intellectually coherent tasting-menu room. Book four to six weeks ahead for dinner; weekday lunch is more accessible.

    Should you book RIJKS® in Amsterdam?

    Yes — and sooner rather than later. RIJKS® holds a Michelin star (2024), ranks #512 in the Opinionated About Dining Casual Europe list (2024), and sits inside the Rijksmuseum, which means it carries both institutional weight and genuine culinary ambition. Chef Joris Bijdendijk has turned what could have been a prestige vanity project into one of Amsterdam's most purposeful dining rooms: a working argument for what modern Dutch cuisine can do when it draws on the country's full cultural and trade history rather than just its pantry. If you are visiting Amsterdam for food, this is a booking worth prioritising.

    What RIJKS® is now

    The version of RIJKS® worth booking today is a more focused, vegetable-forward restaurant than it was in its early years. Bijdendijk has sharpened his approach around Dutch ingredients inflected by the culinary traditions of countries with which the Netherlands has deep historical ties — Indonesia, Suriname, South Africa, Japan, rather than cooking fusion for its own sake. The menu moves between precise and earthy: a millefeuille of beetroot with 24-month-aged Tomasu soy sauce beurre blanc and parsley oil sits alongside dishes like goose perch candied in goose fat with chard, pickled peppers and eel, and a ceviche of scallops with corn, pumpkin and sea buckthorn. The sourcing skews domestic wherever the ingredient quality warrants it.

    The interior was overhauled in a recent renovation and now uses natural materials throughout, which gives the room a warmer register than many museum restaurants manage. You are eating inside one of Europe's most visited cultural institutions, but the dining room does not feel like an afterthought or a gift-shop upgrade. The Google rating of 4.4 across 1,653 reviews is high for a room at this price point, which suggests consistent execution rather than the occasional brilliant meal surrounded by misses.

    The counter question

    RIJKS® does not publish a dedicated counter or bar seating configuration in its public-facing information, but if bar or counter seats are available when you book, they are worth requesting. In a kitchen this precise, one where the chef's signature move is layering Dutch and colonial-influence flavours in compact, technically considered forms, proximity to the kitchen sharpens what you are tasting. Bijdendijk's cooking is conceptual enough that context helps: knowing which dish references the Dutch East India Company spice trade versus which is a riff on the Dutch vegetable garden changes how you read the plate. Counter seats, where available, put you closer to that story. Check at booking whether this option exists for your party size.

    Booking and timing

    RIJKS® is classified as hard to book. It operates Tuesday through Sunday, with lunch service from 11:30 AM to 2 PM and dinner from 6 PM to 8:30 PM. Mondays are closed. Given the Michelin star and the Rijksmuseum footfall that keeps the restaurant visible to international visitors year-round, dinner slots, particularly Friday and Saturday, fill weeks in advance. Aim for at least four to six weeks lead time for a weekend dinner booking, and consider targeting a Tuesday or Wednesday lunch if your schedule allows: the room will be quieter, and Bijdendijk's cooking reads well in daylight. The restaurant is at Museumstraat 2, directly within the Rijksmuseum complex, which also makes it a natural anchor for a museum visit if you plan your day around it.

    Value at €€€€

    At the leading price tier, RIJKS® competes with Amsterdam's other serious tasting-menu rooms. The Michelin star and OAD ranking (#512 in 2024, up from #689 in 2025 provisional data, which reflects ongoing attention) confirm it is delivering at the level the price suggests. For explorers interested in the intellectual architecture of Dutch cuisine, what the spice trade, colonial history, and a northern European climate produce when they meet on a single plate, RIJKS® offers more to think about per course than most rooms at this price. That is not a universal recommendation: if you want a purely comfort-driven, luxury-ingredient tasting menu, Ciel Bleu or Spectrum may suit you better. But if the concept and the sourcing story matter to you, RIJKS® earns its price tier.

    Who should book

    RIJKS® is well suited to food-curious diners who want their meal to have a point of view. The cooking rewards attention: dishes connect to Dutch cultural history in ways that deepen when you know what to look for. Solo diners should ask whether counter or bar seating is available, since eating alone at a table in a formal museum restaurant can feel under-served, being close to the kitchen action compensates. For special occasions, the Rijksmuseum setting adds ceremony without the restaurant having to manufacture it. Groups of four or more will find the room comfortable; it is not a shoebox tasting counter.

    If you are building a broader Amsterdam food itinerary, our full Amsterdam restaurants guide covers the full range from casual to destination. For context on the Dutch fine dining circuit beyond the city, comparable kitchens with equivalent ambition include De Librije in Zwolle, Aan de Poel in Amstelveen, and De Bokkedoorns in Overveen. Further afield, 't Nonnetje in Harderwijk, Brut172 in Reijmerstok, De Groene Lantaarn in Staphorst, De Lindenhof in Giethoorn, and De Treeswijkhoeve in Waalre represent the wider creative Dutch fine dining field worth knowing if RIJKS® sparks your interest in the category.

    For Amsterdam neighbourhood context beyond restaurants, see our Amsterdam hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is RIJKS® good for solo dining?

    Solo diners can eat well at RIJKS®, particularly at lunch when the pace is less formal and the room is less likely to feel couple-oriented. The cooking — Michelin-starred, vegetable-forward, with dishes that reward close attention — is well-suited to a solo diner who wants to focus on the food. That said, RIJKS® does not advertise a dedicated counter or bar-seating configuration, so a solo table is your most likely option. Book in advance: the restaurant is classified as hard to book.

    How far ahead should I book RIJKS®?

    Book at least three to four weeks out for dinner, and two to three weeks for lunch. RIJKS® is classified as hard to book, operates Tuesday through Sunday only (Monday is closed), and carries a Michelin star and an OAD Casual Europe top-500 ranking — all of which keeps demand consistently ahead of availability. For weekend dinners, go further out if you can.

    Can I eat at the bar at RIJKS®?

    RIJKS® does not publicly document bar or counter seating as a walk-in option. If bar seats exist, they are not a confirmed route around the reservation requirement. Your safest move is to book a standard table through the restaurant's reservation system.

    Is RIJKS® worth the price?

    At the €€€€ tier, RIJKS® justifies the spend if you engage with what it is doing: a Michelin-starred kitchen using Dutch products filtered through cultural-historical influences, with a chef (Joris Bijdendijk) who has built a clear point of view around vegetables. It ranked #512 on OAD Casual Europe in 2024, up from #689 in 2025 data, which places it among Amsterdam's serious rooms. If you want straightforward luxury rather than a kitchen with a thesis, Ciel Bleu may feel like a better fit at a similar price point.

    Is RIJKS® good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with the right expectations. The setting — inside the Rijksmuseum — gives it a genuinely distinctive backdrop that most Amsterdam restaurants cannot match, and the Michelin-starred cooking adds weight to the occasion. It works best for occasions where the food is the event, not just the backdrop. For a celebration where atmosphere and service spectacle matter as much as the plate, Ciel Bleu's canal-top views may feel more occasion-appropriate.

    What are alternatives to RIJKS® in Amsterdam?

    Ciel Bleu is the closest like-for-like alternative at the top end, with two Michelin stars and a rooftop perch above the Okura Hotel. Bolenius is worth considering for local-produce cooking in a calmer, less tourist-facing setting. De Kas suits diners who want a greenhouse-garden format with a shorter, produce-driven menu. BAK and Wils both operate at a high level with stronger value propositions at a slightly lower price point.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at RIJKS®?

    Yes, if the format works for you. Bijdendijk's cooking is built around a coherent idea — modern Dutch cuisine informed by the Netherlands' colonial and trade history — which makes a tasting menu the right format for following the thread. Documented dishes such as beetroot millefeuille with Tomasu soy sauce and beurre blanc, or scallop ceviche with corn and sea buckthorn, show a kitchen that works with seasonal Dutch produce rather than importing prestige ingredients for their own sake. If you want à la carte flexibility, check the lunch menu, which may offer more choice.

    Location

    Museumstraat 2, 1071 XX Amsterdam, Netherlands

    Compare RIJKS®

    RIJKS® vs. Similar Venues
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking Difficulty
    RIJKS®€€€€ · Creative€€€€Hard
    Ciel Bleu€€€€ · Creative€€€€Michelin 2 StarUnknown
    BoleniusModern Dutch, Creative€€€€Michelin 1 StarUnknown
    De Kas€€€ · Organic€€€Michelin 1 StarUnknown
    Wils€€€ · World Cuisine€€€Michelin 1 StarUnknown
    BAK€€€ · Farm to table€€€Unknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Also Consider

    • Ciel Bleu, €€€€ · Creative, €€€€
    • Bolenius, Modern Dutch, Creative, €€€€
    • De Kas, €€€ · Organic, €€€
    • Wils, €€€ · World Cuisine, €€€
    • BAK, €€€ · Farm to table, €€€

    How RIJKS® compares in Amsterdam

    At the €€€€ tier, RIJKS® sits alongside Ciel Bleu and Bolenius as the three most credentialed tasting-menu options in Amsterdam. Ciel Bleu has the more conventional luxury-ingredient profile and a higher-floor room in the Okura Hotel, better for pure occasion dining if concept is secondary to spectacle. Bolenius shares RIJKS®'s modern Dutch sourcing philosophy but operates without the museum gravitas and at a comparable price; it is marginally easier to book and delivers strong value. RIJKS® wins on intellectual coherence: the menu has a clearer argument, Dutch identity via colonial history, than either peer, which makes it the better choice for food-curious diners who want something to think about.

    If you are willing to move down one price tier, De Kas is the most compelling alternative. The farm-to-table format is transparent and the setting inside a converted greenhouse in Frankendael Park is genuinely distinctive. It does not have RIJKS®'s Michelin credential or OAD ranking, but the ingredient quality is high and the experience-to-price ratio is strong. Wils and BAK both operate at €€€ and are worth serious consideration for diners who want a less formal, more accessible version of the sourcing-focused Amsterdam dining scene, BAK in particular, for the North Amsterdam waterfront setting and the farm-to-table rigour.

    The practical answer: book RIJKS® if the Michelin credential and the Dutch culinary concept are the draw. Choose De Kas if you want a lower price point with strong ingredient integrity. Go to Ciel Bleu if setting and luxury-ingredient polish matter more than conceptual depth. Bolenius sits between RIJKS® and the mid-tier options, a good fallback if RIJKS® is fully booked but you want to stay in the modern Dutch lane.

    Hours

    Monday
    closed
    Tuesday
    11:30 AM-2 PM 6 PM-8:30 PM
    Wednesday
    11:30 AM-2 PM 6 PM-8:30 PM
    Thursday
    11:30 AM-2 PM 6 PM-8:30 PM
    Friday
    11:30 AM-2 PM 6 PM-8:30 PM
    Saturday
    11:30 AM-2 PM 6 PM-8:30 PM
    Sunday
    11:30 AM-2 PM 6 PM-8:30 PM

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